Marian Poem-Prayers in the Modern Age: Real Assent
By (Author) Jean Ward
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
13th November 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: from c 2000
Literary studies: poetry and poets
Christian sacraments
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Exploring a range of twentieth and twenty-first century Marian prayer-poetry poem-prayers directed to or involving Mary - by poets such as T. S. Eliot, David Jones, Geoffrey Hill, Elizabeth Jennings, Hilary Davies and Rowan Williams, this book traces its resurgence from the late nineteenth-century to the present day.
By the early twentieth century, the once widespread and fervent cult of the Virgin Mary had been at best deeply hidden, if not entirely absent from Englands religious life, since the Reformation. The figure of Mary similarly largely vanished from English poetry, only to return, gradually, as Marian devotion revived in the nineteenth century. The perception of it as somehow un-English, which had developed during the centuries of its absence, presented a challenge to poets who wished to take up the Marian theme in the modern day. This book looks at some ways in which male and female poets from both Roman Catholic and Anglican backgrounds responded to this situation. It also argues that the figure of Mary is a type of John Henry Newmans category of real assent: commitment that is not merely intellectual, but involves the totality of a persons being in relation to God.
Jean Ward is Professor of Literary Studies in English at Gdansk University, Poland.